Sorry Missus have had a "laptop free" few days!Tickets on sale for Belfast tomorrow, rest of the UK on Friday. Belfast is not looking like the intimate gig we thought it may be and is outdoors with 25,000 capacity but am still up for there as Hampden is a schoolnight!! Sent you a text earlier. Frosty, you missed out last year, you have to go for it. I'm wondering why the continuation of the Wrecking Ball Tour.......do you think this is it??

Thankfully Belfast it is!! There were a few hair-raising moments this morning but all came good in the end!!Can I cope with doing it all over again tomorrow for hampden???Badlands are saying Belfast is going to be "the ultimate gig as it is last concert of the tour.....unless he also plays the 21st July, don't book your flights just yet!"!!

We've had to cancel the planned Belfast jaunt as we looked at potential summer holiday dates and this would pretty much rule out a few options for us I do think it will be a great gig tho. I'm sure he'll probably pick up a couple of festival gigs before heading home - but it's been a long tour, so that might be it. Final night's are always great.

Bought tix to go and see Roger Waters at Wembley in September, and I'm planning a wee Champions League jaunt in February and March, plus a Scotland game and maybe a wee trip to the boxing . The real 'Boss' (aka Mrs Sheik) was heard to mutter 'kicking the @rse out of it'!

Ags get onto TicketSoup and register for the pre-sale - I bought my tickets for Hampden tonight! Nae bother.

Sheik Yir Erse wrote: The real 'Boss' (aka Mrs Sheik) was heard to mutter 'kicking the @rse out of it'!

Ags get onto TicketSoup and register for the pre-sale - I bought my tickets for Hampden tonight! Nae bother.

I would normally agree wholeheartedly with Mrs Sheik but after that handy wee tip, you deserve every single one of these treats to yourself Sheik! THANK YOU!!!!!!!! Registered with ticketsoup and tickets purchased in less than 10 stress-free minutes!! How pleased will my colleagues be after all the wailing and knashing of teeth they had to witness this morning as "the website is currently experiencing a high volume of traffic" messages, closely followed by "your waiting time is 15 minutes!"! Then I was sure I had secured tickets for us and The Govan's, only for "an error has occurred, please try again"!!!!!! No.............!! Anyway, there was no error thankfully and my tickets have been printed, but it was a long hour and a half before I had time to check emails!!

The new Leeds Arena, just added earlier today, Wednesday 24th July 2013.I'm going to go for this concert, Mrs fROSTY and I will be back from our holidays by then so forgiveness will be a strong possibility?!?

Will post a full report later, but the usual three and a half hours of heart-stoppin, pants-droppin, house-rockin, earth-quakin, booty-shakin, Viagra-takin, love-makin, legendary performance from Bruce and the band!

Just to keep you going, a wee review from Backstreets.com of last nights gig!! Personal highlights from us to follow! 3 and a half hours .......this is how to do it indeed

JUNE 18, GLASGOW: ARE WE MISSING ANYBODY?Surfacing onto the stage of Glasgow's Hampden Park, beneath a warm blue sky illuminating the faces of a passionate audience, Springsteen shouted "Good evening, Glasgow!" And Glasgow, this is the important part... Bruce and the E Street Band played their first Scottish show since 2009 on what was the second anniversary of death of Big Man Clarence Clemons. Visibly passionate from the offset, the Band provided a powerful performance.

Bruce sang with such refreshing strength, almost as though Glasgow was the first show of tour. By the third song he had already thrown away the setlist for sign requests, and with the band rocking "Jole Blon" and the crowd swaying, Clarence’s fun-loving spirit was very much alive.

The show progressed through more requests, a blistering guitar duel between Stevie and Bruce during "It's Hard to Be a Saint in the City" and more hard rocking staples, before a surprise awaited the captivated audience (and, it seemed, the E Street Band, too). With his back to the crowd, Bruce shouted to the band, and with that, "My City of Ruins" made its return.

The song had been out of the set since Australia. Now, Bruce stood alone again in the deserted area of the stage where once Clarence and Danny played, speaking about the transformation of "My City of Ruins" from the soundtrack of his "adopted hometown" of Asbury Park, to a song which epitomizes what it means to have lost someone ("a brother, a sister, a father, a mother, a friend...") but to have them walk alongside you. Chanting "when the change was made uptown," on stage was a man who missed his best friend dearly, but who could allow that emotion to manifest itself into musical energy. Bruce then asked the question "Are we missing anybody?" again, and again, while the audience worked up their response to deafening proportions.

With the concert powering into the warm summer’s night, Curtis King put the "booty-shaking" into E Street by playing percussion through the bouncing of his "booty" up and down, which Bruce found as entertaining as the audience, shouting, "They always love to surprise me!" As more E Street promises were fulfilled, "sexual organs" were "stimulated" by "I'm on Fire," which had the crowd chanting and women panting. "Tougher Than the Rest," another request, kept the slow-burn going before they busted things wide open.

With people still seated in the stands after "Murder Incorporated" and "Johnny 99," Bruce shouted that he "hadnt done his job" yet; he declared that "within 30 seconds" people’s asses would "send a message to their brain" to get up and dancing. The riff of "Open All Night" transformed the concert into a party, something which the "man with a PhD in saxual healing" would have loved.

The main set closed with "Land of Hope and Dreams," the ultimate song about the journey from this life into the next. Jake came down to the front of the stage and played Clarence’s solo; with tears in many of our eyes we looked on, as something greater than life unfolded on stage before us. When Jake returned to the horn section he raised his sax to the sky, pounded his chest and looked upwards...the Big Man was there.

The encores began with a bang with “Born to Run" and kept the energy up with "Rosalita." "Tenth Avenue Freeze-out," a must on this night if any, was only the mid-point. After that story of the band, "Twist and Shout” had everyone from the stage, to the pit, to the stands way up high dancing and singing. As the song grew ever more climactically towards its conclusion, Bruce looked at Stevie and shouted "Steve! Steve! This crowd... this crowd... this crowd... they make me wanna... SHOUT!" The Isley Brothers' classic followed, Bruce joking that he’s "frick years old" and on the way to "having a heart attack" as the concert ended amid a dancing frenzy.

That was, until Bruce took an acoustic guitar and harmonica, returned to the empty stage and, dripping with sweat and water, played “Thunder Road” to end a near three-hour-and-thirty-minute marathon.

Setlist:We Take Care of Our OwnThe Ties That BindJole BlonIt's Hard to Be a Saint in the CityRadio NowhereNo SurrenderWrecking BallDeath to My HometownMy City of RuinsSpirit in the NightThe E Street ShuffleI'm on FireTougher Than the RestAtlantic CityMurder IncorporatedJohnny 99Open All NightDarlington CountyShackled and DrawnWaitin' on a Sunny DayThe RisingBadlandsLand of Hope and Dreams* * *Born to RunRosalitaDancing in the DarkTenth Avenue Freeze-outTwist and ShoutShoutThunder Road (solo acoustic)

Utterly brilliant Agnes!!!!!! Great set list and that end one would do it for me!!!! The Big Man is very much still alive. Cannot wait now for Belfast! Did you see Sheik? The last time he got to touch him - the nest date is surely a sleepover??????

Blow away the dreams that tear you apartBlow away the dreams that break your heartBlow away the lies that leave you nothing but lost and brokenhearted